Two weeks ago, Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) appeared on NBC’s “Meet the Press” and made a bizarre argument. Eager to defend her support for her party’s regressive tax plan, the Maine Republican, an ostensible moderate, insisted that tax cuts lead to growth, which leads to revenue, which “actually lowers the debt.”
When Chuck Todd asked her for any kind of evidence to bolster her assumptions, Collins’ case crumbled.
And yet, there she was on the Senate floor yesterday, once again making the argument we know to be wrong:
“Tax relief and reform will lift our economy, leading to higher wages for workers and more revenue for the government.”
So, as she sees it, when the government takes in less revenue, it ends up with more revenue.
At face value, Susan Collins has no credible reason to vote for this thing. She urged GOP leaders not to lower the top rate, and they did it anyway. She asked them not to include repeal of the ACA’s individual mandate in the bill, and they ignored her. The Maine Republican also said she expected a vote on some of her health care priorities before passing the tax plan, but settled for a legislative I.O.U. from her party’s leaders. Whether the debt will be repaid is still unclear.
Collins can’t even say she’s doing this for her party, since the Republican plan would pass whether she votes for it or not.
And yet, here we are, preparing to watch Collins vote for her party’s far-right bill, listening to her present arguments that are plainly at odds with all available evidence.
In this case, however, what can be proven appears to be far less significant than what Collins and other Republicans chose to believe. Hebrews 11:1 says faith is “the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.”
With this in mind, the GOP’s tax bill is a striking example of faith-based policymaking.
Republicans say, for example, their tax plan will pay for itself. Confronted with evidence that they’re wrong, these same GOP policymakers say they nevertheless have faith that their talking points are right, and the data and independent analyses are wrong.









